Zhongli Xu1,2,3, Erick Forno1,2, Edna Acosta-Pérez4, Yueh-Ying Han1,2, Franziska Rosser1,2, Michelle L Manni1,2, Glorisa Canino4, Wei Chen1,2, Juan C Celedón1,2. 1. Division of Pediatric Pulmonary Medicine, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 3. School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China. 4. Behavioral Sciences Research Institute, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms underlying the known link between overweight/obesity and childhood asthma are unclear. We aimed to identify differentially expressed genes and pathways associated with obesity-related asthma through a transcriptomic analysis of nasal airway epithelium. METHODS: We compared the whole transcriptome in nasal airway epithelium of youth with overweight or obesity and asthma with that of youth of normal weight and asthma, using RNA sequencing data from a cohort of 235 Puerto Ricans aged 9-20 years (EVA-PR) and an independent cohort of 66 children aged 6-16 years in Pittsburgh (VDKA). Differential expression analysis adjusting for age, sex, sequencing plate number, and sample sorting protocol, and the first five principal components were performed independently in each cohort. Results from the two cohorts were combined in a transcriptome-wide meta-analysis. Gene enrichment and network analyses were performed on top genes. RESULTS: In the meta-analysis, 29 genes were associated with obesity-related asthma at an FDR-adjusted p <.05, including pro-inflammatory genes known to be differentially expressed in adipose tissue of obese subjects (e.g., CXCL11, CXCL10, and CXCL9) and several novel genes. Functional enrichment analyses showed that pathways for interferon signaling, and innate and adaptive immune responses were down-regulated in overweight/obese youth with asthma, while pathways related to ciliary structure or function were up-regulated. Upstream regulatory analysis predicted significant inhibition of the IRF7 pathway. Network analyses identified "hub" genes like GBP5 and SOCS1. CONCLUSION: Our transcriptome-wide analysis of nasal airway epithelium identified biologically plausible genes and pathways for obesity-related asthma in youth.
BACKGROUND: The mechanisms underlying the known link between overweight/obesity and childhood asthma are unclear. We aimed to identify differentially expressed genes and pathways associated with obesity-related asthma through a transcriptomic analysis of nasal airway epithelium. METHODS: We compared the whole transcriptome in nasal airway epithelium of youth with overweight or obesity and asthma with that of youth of normal weight and asthma, using RNA sequencing data from a cohort of 235 Puerto Ricans aged 9-20 years (EVA-PR) and an independent cohort of 66 children aged 6-16 years in Pittsburgh (VDKA). Differential expression analysis adjusting for age, sex, sequencing plate number, and sample sorting protocol, and the first five principal components were performed independently in each cohort. Results from the two cohorts were combined in a transcriptome-wide meta-analysis. Gene enrichment and network analyses were performed on top genes. RESULTS: In the meta-analysis, 29 genes were associated with obesity-related asthma at an FDR-adjusted p <.05, including pro-inflammatory genes known to be differentially expressed in adipose tissue of obese subjects (e.g., CXCL11, CXCL10, and CXCL9) and several novel genes. Functional enrichment analyses showed that pathways for interferon signaling, and innate and adaptive immune responses were down-regulated in overweight/obese youth with asthma, while pathways related to ciliary structure or function were up-regulated. Upstream regulatory analysis predicted significant inhibition of the IRF7 pathway. Network analyses identified "hub" genes like GBP5 and SOCS1. CONCLUSION: Our transcriptome-wide analysis of nasal airway epithelium identified biologically plausible genes and pathways for obesity-related asthma in youth.
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